LOT Polish Airlines’ flight 5055 was headed for New York in 1987 when an engine shaft exploded due to faulty machinery.

The pilots lost control and the plane crashed in the Kabaty Woods just outside Warsaw in Poland.

There were no survivors and the last words heard from the crew were alleged to have been, according to one English translation: “Goodnight, goodbye, we perish!”

‘DON’T DO THAT’

Russian rescuers examine the site of the FlyDubai crash in southern Russia in 2016. The Boeing 737 was attempting to land in bad weather when it crashed short of the runway. Picture: AFP/Russian Emergencies Ministry/STRSource:AFP

Sometimes a pilot’s final words reveal more than just his state of mind, like those of the pilot of the 2016 FlyDubai flight that crashed during severe wind and rain just short of the runway in the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don.

After investigations began into what had caused the disaster, Russia’s Rossiya-1 channel revealed in an exchange between himself and his crew the pilot said: “Don’t do that.”

Moments later, the Boeing 737 exploded into a fireball, killing all 62 people on board.

In 2009, the pilot of Air France flight 447 shouted “F**k: we’re dead!” before the aircraft plunged into the Atlantic, killing all 228 people on board.

The doomed jet’s flight recorders were not recovered from the sea floor until two years after the crash.

‘THAT’S ALL GUYS! F***!’

A Vladivostok Air Tupolev Tu-154M similar to the one involved in the 2001 crash. Picture: contri/Wikimedia CommonsSource:Supplied

Vladivostok Air flight 352 lost control on its approach to Irkutsk airport in Russia in 2001. The

136 passengers and nine crew members on board were killed.

According to the planecrashinfo.com, the pilot’s last words were: “That’s all guys! F***!”

‘ACTUALLY, THESE CONDITIONS DON’T LOOK VERY GOOD AT ALL, DO THEY?’

The Air New Zealand plane was carrying out a sightseeing flight of Antarctica when it crashed, killing all 257 on board, including 200 New Zealanders and one Australian. Picture: AP/New Zealand Archives, HOSource:News Corp Australia

In 1979 Air New Zealand flight 901 was en route for a sightseeing trip of Antarctica.

The aircraft crashed into the slopes of Mount Erebus in Antarctica after a technical error directed the flight the wrong way.

A transcript from the black box recorder reveals the crew were inexperienced with the continent’s harsh weather conditions.

One of the last things the captain said was: “Actually, these conditions don’t look very good at all, do they?”

All 257 on-board were killed.

‘AH, HERE WE GO’

A woman stands by one of several makeshift memorials set up along the coastline in Oxnard, California, following the crash of Alaska Airlines flight 261.Source:AFP

After struggling with a jammed stabiliser, Alaska Airlines flight 261 nosedived into the Pacific Ocean en route to San Francisco in 2000.

Control was lost before an emergency landing could be made at Los Angeles International Airport and all 88 on board were killed.

According to a transcript, published on planecrashinfo.com, the pilot’s final words were: “Ah, here we go.”